'St. Joseph desires to teach men how to be better husbands and better fathers,' said Bishop Gruss in week four of his Lenten Journey with St. Joseph

One can only imagine what Joseph was thinking when he heard the words, “Joseph, son of David, have no fear about taking Mary as your wife. It is by the Holy Spirit that she has conceived this child” (Mt 1:20).

Yet, his faith and trust, in this moment of uncertainty, allowed him to respond as the angel had requested. In accepting the will of God for his life, it was then that Joseph was entrusted with “his” family on earth to watch over his family with daily devotion. St Joseph persevered in this mission with great fidelity and love.

Therefore the Church offers him to us as an exceptional model of service to Christ and to his mysterious plan of salvation. And the Church also provides him as the special patron and protector of all families.  

Over the course of the last, we will say 60 years, we have seen the disintegration of the family life as a loving community built upon faith, love and deep respect for one another. In many ways, as the culture goes, so does the family.  There is no question in my mind that the Evil One and his minions want to destroy the family and have set about to do just this.

We have all seen, and many have experienced, the impact of our culture on family life.  The true purpose for family life has gotten lost in a culture that has vastly changed. 

The family, which is founded and given life by love, is meant to be an effective sign of Christ in the world.  So it is no wonder that the Evil One wants to destroy it.

We find the family, as a holy institution, under attack today from many angles; families are torn apart by the effects of divorce; single parent families are growing, and fatherless families are normal in many communities, non-traditional families have become a new tradition; in other words, there is a collapse of the family unit as the building block of society.  

This is why St. Joseph and the Holy Family are important for families today.

The Holy Family can and should be the model for all families, especially Christian families. We see in the Catechism of the Catholic Church, the family is the original cell of social life. It is the community in which, from childhood, one can learn moral values, begin to honor God, and make good use of freedom.

This is where Jesus received the foundation of his faith life. It was not because he was God, but because he was the child of Mary and Joseph, parents whose faith was primary for their family life.

God has established the family to be a school of love – something beautiful, something delightful, a place which gives life.

St. John Paul II looked at the family as the “domestic church.” This means that it is in the context of the family that we first learn who God is and to prayerfully seek His will for us.

A family as a domestic church is where the Lord is honored, where God’s law is respected, prayer is part of family life, virtue is passed on by word and example, and everyone shares the hopes, the problems and sufferings of everyone else. In this we find the roots of human development and human happiness.

How does your family reflect a “domestic church”?  Ask St. Joseph to guide you in making it so.

There is probably not a single family without their problems.....it’s just that in some families the problems may be or may seem to be larger than others.  As we know, society presents new challenges for raising a healthy, holy, well integrated family today.  I don’t have to tell you that, I’m sure. 

Many people have an image of the Holy Family as being this perfect little family.  But Jesus’ family is not called perfect.  It is called the Holy Family. Holy doesn’t mean perfect.  That should give you with families some hope. It gives me consolation, knowing that I didn’t have the perfect family... but that certain aspects of it were holy.

St. Joseph wants to be the pillar of your family. A pillar is something that supports a strong foundation. In order for your home to stand on a firm foundation, a foundation which is unshakeable, you need St. Joseph.  He desires to teach your family the importance of prayer, thus creating the firm foundation. He wants to show you the importance of mutual respect, purity, honesty, and forgiveness.

St. Joseph wants to teach you the ways of love and patience. And most importantly, he wants to assist you in placing God above everything else.  St. Joseph also wants to lead all of us into a deeper relationship with Mary and Jesus, if we only ask him.

St. Joseph, the pillar of the family, teaches the importance of motherhood, fatherhood, and children. He is the saint of the childhood and the hidden years of Jesus.

No matter how good of a husband and father you are, St. Joseph desires to teach men how to be better husbands and better fathers; how to be more sacrificing for their wives and children. Most importantly, he wants to teach men how to be “pillars” of their families, and become holy through the process. What husband or father wouldn’t want this?

A world filled with men like St. Joseph will not only renew the family, but our culture as well. In this season of Lent, go to St. Joseph and ask for his intercession to help you become the pillar of your family.

St. Joseph, Pillar of Families, pray for us!

Bishop Robert Gruss